Matthew 2:1-12 · The Visit of the Magi
A Star And A Dream
Matthew 2:1-12
Sermon
by King Duncan
Loading...

Charles Kuralt travels across the United States learning about people. Recently he visited the mountains of North Carolina. Kuralt claims that mountain people know a lot of things the rest of us have forgotten. For example, at the stroke of midnight on New Year's Eve the mountain people he visited open their windows. That's to let bad luck out and good luck in. On New Year's Day they eat black-eyed peas for dinner. That's also for good luck. Don't worry if you forgot. Simply look for a red-haired girl riding on a white mule. That's good luck any time of the year.

Another thing mountain people know is that the first twelve days of January correspond to the first twelve months of the year when it comes to predicting weather. Accordingly, if you want to know what the weather will be like in May just look out the window on Wednesday, January 5. "Mountain people know so many things," Kuralt says. It's a wonder, "those of us who don't know them can get along at all." Other examples include, if your nose itches that means company is coming. Or if a honey bee buzzes around your head that means you're about to find some money. If you need to stop a cut from bleeding just say the sixth verse of the sixteenth chapter of Ezekiel while walking toward the sunrise. "Everybody around here knows that," he says. (1) I thought you could use some good advice on this first Sunday of a new year.

Where do you turn when you want some good advice? Some people look to the stars. I read recently that in Canada, fully 88 percent of the people know their astrological sign and 50 percent read their horoscope at least once a month. Only half as many read the Bible that often. (2) I'm not going to ask you if you read your astrological forecast. Some foolish people live by them. That was true in the ancient world as well. People have always wanted to know what the future holds. Star gazers were very popular at the time of Jesus' birth. They were welcomed by kings. They were respected in the marketplace. Many became quite wealthy.

The Wise Men from the East were astrologers. But they were also deeply religious. They scanned the heavens nightly looking for some sign from God. One evening a sign appeared ” a star they had never seen before. It was bigger than any other star in the heavens. "Could this be the sign we have been looking for?" they wondered. Perhaps if they followed the star it would lead them to the answers they had been seeking.

Notice, first of all, the wise men's response to the star of Bethlehem. THEY DROPPED EVERYTHING AND FOLLOWED IT. Some people spend their lives star-gazing ” but never act on what they see.

There is an interesting story about a director of Standard Oil Company who was reading his Bible one day and came upon Exodus 2:3. This is the story of the mother of Moses seeking to hide her child from the Egyptians. She makes a little basket made of bulrushes, you'll remember. This is how the writer of Exodus describes the process, "...and [she]daubed it with slime and with pitch."

The Standard Oil director knew that where there is pitch there is usually oil. So he sent his engineers to work. Today they are pumping vast quantities of oil out of the ground near Moses' home town in Egypt.

There are two lessons here, I suppose. One is about reading your Bible. The other is about dropping everything and acting on what you read. Gazing at a star isn't nearly as rewarding as following one.

Perhaps you remember the old Russian legend about a woman named Babushka. Like too many of us Babushka was always busy, too busy. She was a tidy housekeeper, always occupied with the many chores that needed her attention. One evening as she is cleaning her house she hears a commotion out on the street. Looking out her window she sees her neighbors pointing to a star high in the heavens. Off in the distance she sees a caravan approaching.

Babushka is startled to hear a knock at her door. She opens it to find three richly dressed kings. They ask her if they could lodge there overnight. After all, she has the finest house in the whole village. That night they tell Babushka that they are following a star. They invite her to go with them in search of the newborn king. Babushka makes excuses. First she tells them she doesn't have a proper gift. Besides she has to clean up her house before she does anything. As the three kings are leaving she promises to join them the next day after her work is complete. But the kings leave without her.

The next day Babushka cleans her house and finds a proper gift. All of a sudden she has the urgent desire to catch up with these men. They are a full day's journey ahead of her but, she hopes to catch them. Everywhere she asks if people have seen the three kings. Finally she tracks them to the village of Bethlehem. But she is too late. The kings have come and gone. And the baby they were searching for is gone too. Babushka missed the kings and the King of Kings. According to legend she continues her search year after year. In fact many believe that she can still be seen in villages at Christmas time, looking for the Christ Child. "Is he here?" she asks the villagers, "Is he here?" (3)

Follow the star. That's good advice for this first Sunday of a New Year. Carpe Diem ” seize the day. Get into action. Don't let life pass you by.

But there is a second lesson here. THERE IS A PLACE AT THE MANGER FOR YOU AND FOR ME. The wise men continue their search for the Christ Child. After a profitless stop to consult with Herod in Jerusalem they once again begin following the star. It seems to be moving, leading the way to the Baby Jesus.

Soon it stops over the little village of Bethlehem. The wise men find the place where Jesus is and kneel down and offer him the finest gifts known in all the world ” gold, frankincense, and myrrh.

Notice that the Wise Men were the very first to call the Baby Jesus, "King of the Jews." That's a little bit unusual. Tradition tells us that they themselves were not Jews. But somehow they knew that there was a place for them at the manger. In the babe of Bethlehem they see God's promise that Jesus will be the Savior for all the world. Jews and Gentiles, rich folks and poor, men and women of every color and nation ” all are included in God's plan. The three men from the east had a right to be there. They belonged.

A young lady named Mary Lou Baert knows the importance of belonging. Mary Lou lived and worked for over a year in a rural area in Mexico. She quickly discovered how difficult life is for many of the Mexican people. Clean drinking water, something most of us take for granted, was a precious commodity. Time passed quickly for Mary Lou and she not only enjoyed the experience but also felt the beauty of the land and of the people who lived in that remote village.

The time came for Mary Lou to leave. She had mixed emotions. She enjoyed living and worshiping with these people. Yet she was uneasy because no one said "thank you" to her for coming to work with them. She began questioning her effectiveness. Did she say something to offend or hurt some of these people she cared about so much? Mary Lou thought about these things as she packed. The next morning the pastor would accompany her on the long walk back to the highway where she'd get a bus for Mexico City.

When the pastor arrived the next morning, Mary Lou told him she had some things to pick up at the church. As they walked out of the church the pastor suddenly caught her arm. "Look!" he exclaimed pointing toward the east. She saw three young boys walking along the dusty road carrying something in their hands. "Senorita," one of the boys said, "thank you for coming to live among us." "We have brought these gifts for you," another boy said. The children's gifts consisted of peanuts, flowers, and freshly cut and cleaned cacti. Before Mary Lou realized it people from the church had gathered around her. They hugged her and thanked her for coming to their village. Her tears flowed as she expressed her gratitude to them for teaching her how to love the land and for helping her experience the God of the wilderness. (4)

Mary Lou belonged there. That's what she needed to know. That's what moved her to tears. I am convinced that many people do not seize the opportunities life sends because they have the feeling that such opportunities are not for them. They feel they do not deserve life's richest blessings ” that somehow those blessings are reserved for people who are special. How sad. If there is one thing the Gospel teaches us, it is that each of us is special ” not on our own merit ” but because of God's great love for us. Each of us belongs.

This brings us to the last thing to be said. CHASING A STAR WILL OFTEN BRING A CHANGE OF DIRECTION. In the wise men's case, it was necessary to go back home by a different route in order to avoid Herod. They went home a different way. My guess is they also went home different people.

Bill Demby was a twenty-year-old Army private serving his country in Vietnam. On March 26, 1971 a Vietcong rocket hit his vehicle. Bill lost both his legs below the knee. He spent the next year in Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington, and then tried to put his life back together.

Bill had been a promising athlete before going to Vietnam. Now he had no legs. All he had was faith and determination. Bill began to play sports again with the aid of artificial legs. He was in Nashville in 1987 at a basketball tournament sponsored by the U. S. Amputee Athletic Association. He was invited to audition for a DuPont commercial. He was very wary about doing it. He knew that on television, they can go into the cutting room and put things together any way they want. Reluctantly Bill agreed to do the commercial.

The day of the filming was long; he played basketball over four hours as the camera recorded his every move. The director, Rick Levine, called him aside and asked if he would mind if one of the players knocked him down. This was a new twist to the commercial, but the director felt it would add some dramatic appeal. Bill thought for a moment and then agreed. And it worked. The fall added humanity to the commercial ” especially the expression in Bill's eyes after he hit the ground. The commercial was an instant success. It even won awards. Bill became a celebrity of sorts. "I walked into McDonald's the other day to get something to eat," Bill recalls. "This guy said hello to me and I said hi back. I thought he was just a friendly guy. But then he said, `I liked the commercial.'" Reflecting on the whole experience Bill says, "I have a tendency to think we're all sort of crazy. The idea that thirty seconds could completely change a man's life." (5)

Do you believe a life can be changed in thirty seconds? I do. All we have to do is kneel before a manger. Don't miss your opportunity. Everyone is welcome. Give him your heart today.


1. Charles Kuralt, DATELINE AMERICA, (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1979), pp. 11-13.

2. CURRENT THOUGHTS & TRENDS, October 1993, p. 29.

3. Wendy M. Wright, THE VIGIL, (Nashville: Upper Room Books, 1992), pp. 166-167.

4. "Gifts from the East," Mary Lou Santillan Baert, CHRISTMAS REMEMBERED, (Ron DelBene (ed). Nashville: Upper Room Books), 1991, pp. 47-49.

5. Bob Greene, HE WAS A MIDWESTERN BOY ON HIS OWN, (New York: Atheneum, 1991), pp. 262-267.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan